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  • VATICAN CITY- 26 JULY 2017: The Vatican decided to cut the water in this 17th century fountain by Gian Lorenzo Bernini in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2741.jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of the Tiber river whose water level has dropped recently, in Rome, Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2955.jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of the Tiber river whose water level has dropped recently, in Rome, Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2910.jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of the Tiber river whose water level has dropped recently, in Rome, Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2884.jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of the Tiber river whose water level has dropped recently, in Rome, Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2821.jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of the Tiber river whose water level has dropped recently, in Rome, Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2794.jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of the Tiber river whose water level has dropped recently, in Rome, Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2782.jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of the Tiber river whose water level has dropped recently, in Rome, Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2758.jpg
  • VATICAN CITY- 26 JULY 2017: The Vatican decided to cut the water in this 17th century fountain by Gian Lorenzo Bernini in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2713.jpg
  • VATICAN CITY- 26 JULY 2017: The Vatican decided to cut the water in this 17th century fountain by Gian Lorenzo Bernini in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2685.jpg
  • VATICAN CITY- 26 JULY 2017: The Vatican decided to cut the water in this 17th century fountain by Gian Lorenzo Bernini in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2672.jpg
  • VATICAN CITY- 26 JULY 2017: The Vatican decided to cut the water in this 17th century fountain by Gian Lorenzo Bernini in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2652.jpg
  • VATICAN CITY- 26 JULY 2017: The Vatican decided to cut the water in this 17th century fountain by Gian Lorenzo Bernini in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2619.jpg
  • VATICAN CITY- 26 JULY 2017: The Vatican decided to cut the water in this 17th century fountain by Gian Lorenzo Bernini in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2578.jpg
  • VATICAN CITY- 26 JULY 2017: The Vatican decided to cut the water in this 17th century fountain by Gian Lorenzo Bernini in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2569.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: An ACEA (the Roman city water utility) water collecting unit is seen here on newly exposd earth of Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently,  in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2491.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: An ACEA (the Roman city water utility) water collecting unit is seen here on Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently,  in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2272.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: An ACEA (the Roman city water utility) water collecting unit is seen here on newly exposd earth of Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently,  in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2490.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: An ACEA technician (the Roman city water utility) measured the water level by Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2473.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: An ACEA technician (the Roman city water utility) measured the water level by Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2465.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: An ACEA technician (the Roman city water utility) measured the water level by Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2454.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: An ACEA technicians (the Roman city water utility) sewer cover is seen here by the the ACEA collecting water unit by Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2407.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: ACEA technicians (the Roman city water utility) tomeasured the water level by Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2365.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: An ACEA (the Roman city water utility) water collecting unit is seen here on Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently,  in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2323.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: An ACEA (the Roman city water utility) water collecting unit is seen here on newly exposd earth of Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently,  in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2509.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of a newly exposed earth in front of the town of Anguillara Sabazia on Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2450.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: An ACEA (the Roman city water utility) water collecting unit is seen here on Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently,  in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2287.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: An ACEA (the Roman city water utility) water collecting unit is seen here on Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently,  in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2275.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of a beached rowboat on a newly exposed earth in front of the town of Anguillara Sabazia on Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2426.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of a newly exposed earth in front of the town of Anguillara Sabazia on Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2410.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of a newly exposed earth in front of the town of Anguillara Sabazia on Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2358.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of a beached rowboat on a newly exposed earth in front of the town of Anguillara Sabazia on Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2420.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A stage (or hydrometic measurement) indicates the water level at minus 1,50m on a jetty here in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2045.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A stage (or hydrometic measurement) indicates the water level at minus 1,50m on a jetty here in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2050.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A stage (or hydrometic measurement) indicates the water level at minus 1,50m on a jetty here in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_1897.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: Levels of water and its recent drop can be seen on wooden pickets in Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_1839.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A stage (or hydrometic measurement) indicates the water level at minus 1,50m on a jetty here in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2059.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: Fisherman Mauro Noro, 42, fishes from a jetty in Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_1886.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of Lake Bracciano whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, inAnguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2110.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of Lake Bracciano whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, inAnguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2098.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A woman is seen here by her house overlooking Lake Bracciano whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2239.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A boat is seen here by Lake Bracciano whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2175.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A paddle boat is seen here by Lake Bracciano whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2138.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of Lake Bracciano whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, inAnguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2114.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of Lake Bracciano whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, inAnguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2108.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: An elderly man walks by Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2082.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: Fisherman Mauro Noro, 42, fishes from a jetty in Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2014.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of Lake Bracciano whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, from Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_1974.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: Fisherman Mauro Noro, 42, fishes from a jetty in Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_1963.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: Swans are seen here in Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently,  in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_1951.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: Swans are seen here in Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently,  in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_1917.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: Fisherman Mauro Noro, 42, fishes from a jetty in Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_1855.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: Fisherman Mauro Noro, 42, fishes from a jetty in Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_1852.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: An elderly man walks on a jetty in Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_1828.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A young man walks on a jetty in Lake Bracciano, whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters, in Anguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_1817.jpg
  • ANGUILLARA SABAZIA (LAKE BRACCIANO), ITALY - 26 JULY 2017: A view of Lake Bracciano whose level has dropped more than 1,50 meters recently, inAnguillara Sabazia (Lake Bracciano), Italy, on July 26th 2017.<br />
<br />
Lake Bracciano provides eight percent of Rome's water and has sunk about 1.5 meters<br />
<br />
A severe drought and sweltering temperatures have led Rome city officials to consider a potential rationing of drinking water for eight hours a day for a million and a half Rome residents. The water crisis has become yet another sign of man being at the mercy of an increasingly extreme climate, but also of once mighty Rome’s political impotence, managerial ineptitude and overall decline.
    CIPG_20170726_NYT_Bracciano__M3_2122.jpg
  • GARDONE RIVIERA, ITALY - 20 APRIL 2018: A bronze statue of Aphrodite is seen here by the stream of Crazy Water which then flows downstream into the valley, at the Vittoriale degli Italiani, a hillside estate overlooking the Garda lake and  where the Italian writer Gabriele d'Annunzio lived after his defenestration in 1922 until his death in 1938, in Gardone Riviera, Italy, on April 20th 2018.<br />
<br />
Lake Garda is the largest lake in Italy. It is a popular holiday location located in northern Italy, about halfway between Brescia and Verona, and between Venice and Milan on the edge of the Dolomites. The lake and its shoreline are divided between the provinces of Verona (to the south-east), Brescia (south-west), and Trentino (north).
    CIPG_20180420_GOURM-TRAV_LakeGarda_M...jpg
  • GIGLIO ISLAND, ITALY - 25 August 2013: Elio Vincenzi (center, in a black diving suit), the 65 years old husband of the missing and presumed dead Costa Concordia cruise ship passenger Mariagrazia Trecarichi, steps out of the water where he rinsed his suit after diving by Le Scole where he placed flowers by an un underwater statue of the Virgin Mary in memory of his wife,  in Giglio Island, Italy, on August 25th 2013.<br />
<br />
On 13 January 2012 at about 9:45 pm, in calm seas and overcast weather, under command of Captain Francesco Schettino, Costa Concordia struck a rock in the Tyrrhenian Sea just off the eastern shore of Isola del Giglio. Of the 3,229 passengers and 1,023 crew known to have been aboard, 30 people died, and two more passengers are missing and presumed dead, inclusding Mrs Trecarichi. Mariagrazia Trecarichi had survived two cancers and decided to celebrate her 50th birthday on the Costa Concordia.
    CIPG_20130825_STERN_Giglio__M3_4112.jpg
  • ATTENTION: THIS IS A RESCUE SIMULATION THE MALTESE FORCES ORGANIZED FOR MY NYT SHOOT - NOT REAL. VALLETTA, MALTA - JUNE 22:  Vessels navigating in the Mediterrean Sea and  Maltese  SAR (Search and Rescue)waters (purple trapezoid) are shown on the monitor of the Vessel Traffic Management Information System on a patrolboat during a rescue simulation of man overboard  near the military port of Marsamxett Harbour in Valetta, Malta on June 22, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110622_NYT_MALTA__MG_1614.jpg
  • LUQA, MALTA - JUNE 21: A station of the Vessel Traffic Management Information System, which manages the the vessel traffic in Maltese waters, is here at the Rescue Coordination Center in the Armed Forces of Malta base in Luqa on June 21, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110621_NYT_MALTA__MG_0642.jpg
  • LUQA, MALTA - JUNE 21:  Vessels navigating in the Maltese waters (orange oval) are shown on the monitor of the Vessel Traffic Management Information System at the Rescue Coordination Center in the Armed Forces of Malta base in Luqa on June 21, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110621_NYT_MALTA__MG_0626.jpg
  • LUQA, MALTA - JUNE 21: Operators check information on vessels in Maltese territorial and SAR (Search and Rescue) waters on the monitors of the Vessel Traffic Management Information System at the Rescue Coordination Center in the Armed Forces of Malta base in Luqa on June 21, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110621_NYT_MALTA__MG_0622.jpg
  • LUQA, MALTA - JUNE 21: an operator checks information on vessels in Maltese territorial and SAR (Search and Rescue) waters on the monitors of the Vessel Traffic Management Information System at the Rescue Coordination Center in the Armed Forces of Malta base in Luqa on June 21, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110621_NYT_MALTA__MG_0612.jpg
  • LUQA, MALTA - JUNE 21:  Vessels navigating in the Mediterrean Sea and  Maltese  SAR (Search and Rescue)waters (purple trapezoid) are shown on the monitor of the Vessel Traffic Management Information System at the Rescue Coordination Center in the Armed Forces of Malta base in Luqa on June 21, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110621_NYT_MALTA__MG_0599.jpg
  • ATTENTION: THIS IS A RESCUE SIMULATION THE MALTESE FORCES ORGANIZED FOR MY NYT SHOOT - NOT REAL. VALLETTA, MALTA - JUNE 22:  Vessels navigating in the Mediterrean Sea and  Maltese  SAR (Search and Rescue)waters (purple trapezoid) are shown on the monitor of the Vessel Traffic Management Information System on a patrolboat during a rescue simulation of man overboard  near the military port of Marsamxett Harbour in Valetta, Malta on June 22, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110622_NYT_MALTA__MG_1601.jpg
  • ATTENTION: THIS IS A RESCUE SIMULATION THE MALTESE FORCES ORGANIZED FOR MY NYT SHOOT - NOT REAL. VALLETTA, MALTA - JUNE 22:  A rescue simulation of man overboard is undertaken by the Maritime Squadron of the Armed Forces of Malta with a patrolboat and rigid inflatable boat near the military port of Marsamxett Harbour in Valetta, Malta on June 22, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110622_NYT_MALTA__MG_1594.jpg
  • ATTENTION: THIS IS A RESCUE SIMULATION THE MALTESE FORCES ORGANIZED FOR MY NYT SHOOT - NOT REAL. VALLETTA, MALTA - JUNE 22:  A rescue simulation of man overboard is undertaken by the Maritime Squadron of the Armed Forces of Malta with a patrolboat and rigid inflatable boat near the military port of Marsamxett Harbour in Valetta, Malta on June 22, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110622_NYT_MALTA__MG_1561.jpg
  • ATTENTION: THIS IS A RESCUE SIMULATION THE MALTESE FORCES ORGANIZED FOR MY NYT SHOOT - NOT REAL. VALLETTA, MALTA - JUNE 22:  A rescue simulation of man overboard is undertaken by the Maritime Squadron of the Armed Forces of Malta with a patrolboat and rigid inflatable boat near the military port of Marsamxett Harbour in Valetta, Malta on June 22, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
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Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110622_NYT_MALTA__MG_1473.jpg
  • ATTENTION: THIS IS A RESCUE SIMULATION THE MALTESE FORCES ORGANIZED FOR MY NYT SHOOT - NOT REAL. VALLETTA, MALTA - JUNE 22:  A rescue simulation of man overboard is undertaken by the Maritime Squadron of the Armed Forces of Malta with a patrolboat and rigid inflatable boat near the military port of Marsamxett Harbour in Valetta, Malta on June 22, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110622_NYT_MALTA__MG_1359.jpg
  • ATTENTION: THIS IS A RESCUE SIMULATION THE MALTESE FORCES ORGANIZED FOR MY NYT SHOOT - NOT REAL. VALLETTA, MALTA - JUNE 22:  A rescue simulation of man overboard is undertaken by the Maritime Squadron of the Armed Forces of Malta with a patrolboat and rigid inflatable boat near the military port of Marsamxett Harbour in Valetta, Malta on June 22, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
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Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110622_NYT_MALTA__MG_1349.jpg
  • ATTENTION: THIS IS A RESCUE SIMULATION THE MALTESE FORCES ORGANIZED FOR MY NYT SHOOT - NOT REAL. VALLETTA, MALTA - JUNE 22:  A rescue simulation of man overboard is undertaken by the Maritime Squadron of the Armed Forces of Malta with a patrolboat and rigid inflatable boat near the military port of Marsamxett Harbour in Valetta, Malta on June 22, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
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Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110622_NYT_MALTA__MG_1339.jpg
  • ATTENTION: THIS IS A RESCUE SIMULATION THE MALTESE FORCES ORGANIZED FOR MY NYT SHOOT - NOT REAL. VALLETTA, MALTA - JUNE 22: A boat used by immigrants to cross the sea from Libya to Malta is now in the military port of Marsamxett Harbour in Valetta, Malta on June 22, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110622_NYT_MALTA__MG_1326.jpg
  • ATTENTION: THIS IS A RESCUE SIMULATION THE MALTESE FORCES ORGANIZED FOR MY NYT SHOOT - NOT REAL. VALLETTA, MALTA - JUNE 22:  A mamber of the Maltese patrolboat waits for the rescue simulation of man overboard to be done by the Maritime Squadron of the Armed Forces of Malta near the military port of Marsamxett Harbour in Valetta, Malta on June 22, 2011. The Rescue Coordination Center receives information about boats and vessels movements as well as SOS requests in the Maltese waters and the SAR (Search and Rescue) waters. Malta's competence of coordination of the SAR waters is 25,000 square nautical miles, which also includes the Italian island of Lampedusa. The vast Maltese SAR waters correspond to the Maltese Flight Information Region (FIR).<br />
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Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    CIPG_20110622_NYT_MALTA__MG_1318.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: A young couple poses for a snapshot in front of the capsized cruise ship in Giglio. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_17.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Tourists on the Toremar ferry from Porto Santo Stefano are headed to Giglio,  the Tuscan island where the Costa Concordia cruise ship capsized on January 14th 2012. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_05.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: An elderly couple on the ferry from Giglio to Porto Santo Stefano, in Tuscany. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_46.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Giglio, one of the island of the Tuscan Archipelago, as seen from the ferry headed to Porto Santo Stefano, in Tuscany. The capsized Costa Concordia cruise ship can be seen from such a distance. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_45.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Tourists on the ferry  photograph and look at the Costa Concordia cruise ship capsized on January 14th as they leave Giglio and head to Porto Santo Stefano, in Tuscany. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_43.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: An ice-cream maker is in his shop by the Giglio harbor. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_39.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: A couple walks in the street of Giglio, an island of the National Park of the Tuscan Archipelago where the Costa Concordia cruise ship capsized on January 14th 2012. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_37.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: A couple walks in the street of Giglio, an island of the National Park of the Tuscan Archipelago where the Costa Concordia cruise ship capsized on January 14th 2012. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_36.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: A boat is anchored by the reef known as Le Scole and hit by the Costa Concordia cruise ship before capsizing about 3,000 feet further fown by the harbor. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_35.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: A waitress serves two coffees in a Cafe by the harbor in Giglio, not far from where the Costa Concordia cruise ship capsized on January 14th 2012. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_34.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Tourists have lunch in a restaurant by the harbor in Giglio, not far from where the Costa Concordia cruise ship capsized on January 14th 2012. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_32.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: A waitress serves a dish of pasta in a restaurant by the harbor in Giglio, not far from where the Costa Concordia cruise ship capsized on January 14th 2012. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_31.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Toursists for a one day trip in Giglio look at the cruise ship capsized on January 14th 2012.  Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_26.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Mayor of Giglio Sergio Ortelli, 56. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_24.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Mayor of Giglio Sergio Ortelli, 56. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_23.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Toursists arrive for a one day trip in the centre of Giglio by the harbor. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_22.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Tourists on the ferry arriving in Giglio look at the Costa Concordia cruise ship which capsized on January 14th 2012. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_21.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: A man read a book by the Giglio harbor, bot far from where the Costa Concordia cruise ship capsized on January 14th 2012. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_20.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: The Costa Concordia capsized by the Giglio island. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_19.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Toursists for a one day trip in Giglio rest, eat and look at the cruise ship capsized on January 14th 2012.  Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_16.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Toursists for a one day trip in Giglio look at the cruise ship capsized on January 14th 2012.  Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_15.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Toursists for a one day trip in Giglio look at the cruise ship capsized on January 14th 2012.  Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_14.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: A poster promotes the islands of the National Partk of the Tuscan Achipelago in the ferry headed from Porto Santo Stefano to Giglio,  the Tuscan island where the Costa Concordia cruise ship capsized on January 14th 2012. Tuscan islandGiglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_12.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Tourists on the ferry from Porto Santo Stefano to Giglio look at the Costa Concordia cruise ship capsized on January 14th as they approach the Tuscan island. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_10.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Tourists on the ferry from Porto Santo Stefano to Giglio photograph the Costa Concordia cruise ship capsized on January 14th as they approach the Tuscan island. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_08.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Tourists board the Toremar ferry departing from Porto Santo Stefano in Tuscany and headed to Giglio, the Tuscan island where the Costa Concordia cruise ship capsized on January 14th 2012. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_01.jpg
  • GIGLIO (GR), ITALY - 9 APRIL, 2012: Tourists on the ferry  photograph and look at the Costa Concordia cruise ship capsized on January 14th as they leave Giglio and head to Porto Santo Stefano, in Tuscany. Giglio, a Tuscan island famous for its pristine waters and quiet living style, faces the challenges of starting a tourist season with a 225,000-tonne ship stuck at the entrance of its tiny port. Months after the Costa Concordia shipwreck, the Tuscany Region and Ministry for Tourism financed a 50,000-euro promotional campaign to encourage visitors to go to Giglio for the summer, while islanders are creating new walking paths and wine tasting tours to diversify their offer, trying to take advantage of the popularity that the tiny island has gained globally last January. The new attraction on Giglio has already caused an increase in the number of tourists who go to the island just for one day. <br />
<br />
Ph. Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    giglio_44.jpg
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